Dangerous times and it will be interesting to see how the events of the next few days and weeks unfold, particularly the role of the Guardia Civil, always seen as Franco's enforcers while he wielded power and never really trusted even today by the older generation with long memories.
You are right about the lack of justice for the many major atrocities carried out and you are also correct about the ETA situation over the last few years.It never left
ETA continued killing PP politicians until early this century, stopped in 2010 and this year gave up its weapons.
Catalans do live in France. Area to south of Perpignan Catalan, with many locals often speaking Catalan ( a language more closely linked to Italian than either French or Spanish)You are right about the lack of justice for the many major atrocities carried out and you are also correct about the ETA situation over the last few years.
I think it is worth mentioning that Catalans and Basques are not one and the same. They share contiguous parts of northern Spain but the Catalans are essentially Spanish in that they don't live also in France. Their neighbours to the west, the Basques, are distinctly different from Spanish people - their DNA or certainly parts of their genetic code are not common with that of other races on the European mainland - and they exist both in NW Spain and SW France.
What they share is a desire for self-determination, a wish to be free from the Madrid government. It is that part that I find troubling as if unrest erupts in Catalonia, the Basques may see that as an opportunity to renew their claims for separatism. When demonstrations by the public are swiftly dealt with by paramilitary police, brutality by those forces is frequently employed and news agencies find they have great difficulty getting anywhere near the centre of the action.
Oppression of the people by a fascist government lasted about 40 years in Spain and those old enough will remember that General Franco was still the de facto ruler there until 1975.
Tom
Thank you for correcting me. It is true some Catalans reside in the south of France but only somewhat less than half of the Basque population on the French side. In fact, the total number of 'French' Catalans at the last count was around 110,000, which very closely resembles the population of Boris Johnson's Uxbridge and S Ruislip constituency, so not that many really although with far higher IQs I would hazard!Catalans do live in France. Area to south of Perpignan Catalan, with many locals often speaking Catalan ( a language more closely linked to Italian than either French or Spanish)
I don't see why it would necessarily leave. The people's living in those regions were born into the European union area and therefore have the rights that go with it. You are harking back to the propaganda from the time of the Scottish referendum. I am not sure that there were pronouncements from the official sides of the eu or the ecj at the time .Perhaps I can be corrected? . One of the sticking points in the current brexitI suppose Catalan independence would entail loss of EU membership too. I wonder if their fervent nationalism has meant their losing sight of that? Could Catalan survive without free access to the EU market? I have my doubts.
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Therein lies the problem Tom. It depends who is doing the counting and who is drawing the maps. To the victor not only the spoils of war, they get chance to write history. Pyrenees Oriental and Languedoc Roussillon consider themselves Catalan..( more so towards south but are less political and more settled than people in Northern Spain but my bet would be if Catalans living in Spain vote for independence in their ( as reported by Spain) illegal referendum , it will prove problematic for France. There are way more than 110,000 Catalans in France..( There are more than that in Perpignan alone. The massacre of Catalans was predominantly in what is now France. Fraternite, Egalite,Liberte didn't really apply to the Catalans. Ask anyone who knows anything about rugby where Catalans play? Catalan Dragons home ground is Perpignan.Thank you for correcting me. It is true some Catalans reside in the south of France but only somewhat less than half of the Basque population on the French side. In fact, the total number of 'French' Catalans at the last count was around 110,000, which very closely resembles the population of Boris Johnson's Uxbridge and S Ruislip constituency, so not that many really although with far higher IQs I would hazard!
The Basque numbers in France may be as many as 239,000, about the same population as Portsmouth, but as these little charts from Wiki reveal, (thank you Wiki!) Catalans have a far greater 'diaspora' than the Basques who are condensed into a much tighter area and Catalans generally don't speak Basque as far as I know although both groups share Spanish and French to varying degrees.
To add some relevance to those numbers, something over 300,000 British ex-pats live in Spain alone.
Interestingly, the extremists of both pro-independence groups seem never to have combined as terrorist units, ETA being the long-proscribed armed Basque wing, while there have been several small Catalan terror groups, particularly active through the 1970s and 1980s.
Catalans
Total population
c. 5.5 million
Regions with significant populations
Spain (people born in Catalonia) 4,800,000[1]
Argentina (estimates vary)188,000
France 110,000
Mexico 63,000
Germany 48,000
Peru 39,000
Andorra 29,000
Italy (Algherese Catalans in Alghero, Sardinia) 23,000
Chile 16,000
Venezuela 6,200
Cuba 3,600
USA (estimates vary) 700-1,738 [1][2]
Ecuador 850 [3]
Languages
Catalan (native); Spanish and French (as a result of immigration or language shift)Religion
Christianity (Catholicism)[4]Related ethnic groups
Aragonese, Andorrans, Balearics, Occitans, Valencians, other Latin peoples
Basques
EuskaldunakTotal population
c. 3 million worldwideRegions with significant populations
Spain (people living in the Basque Provinces of Spain, including some areas where most people do not identify themselves as Basque) 2,410,000
France (people living in the Basque Provinces of France, not all of whom identify as Basque) 239,000[1]
United States (self-identifying as having Basque ancestry) 57,793[3]
Languages
Religion
Christianity (Catholicism)[4] Others
Tom
But Catalan isn't a member of the EU until accepted as such, so their citizens would no longer have EU rights, just as we in the UK won't when we leave the EU.I don't see why it would necessarily leave. The people's living in those regions were born into the European union area and therefore have the rights that go with it. You are harking back to the propaganda from the time of the Scottish referendum. I am not sure that there were pronouncements from the official sides of the eu or the ecj at the time .Perhaps I can be corrected? . One of the sticking points in the current brexit
talks is the treatment of all European citizens including those listed as UK subjects.
There is a lot of truth in your assertions 'anotherkiwi'. As one who has been a part-time resident of southern Spain for two decades, I have been acutely aware of the paucity of fresh water in Andalusia, the need for which has grown immensely over the years as a result of the boom in tourism since the 1960s.It is all about xenophobia, the Catalan and Basque areas are rich and industrial and they don't want to pay for the Gypsies of Andalusia... Besides that Catalan politicians are just as corrupt as those in Madrid